PAUL LUSHION, our environment correspondent, on some very worrying scientific findings about air quality in Croydon – before the Beddington incinerator even begins full operation

One of the borough’s air pollution monitors. But is the council prepared to take real action to reduce pollution?

According to the Evening Standard, “Croydon has been named the worst borough in London for asthma, as it was revealed that poorer areas have far higher hospital admission rates for asthma than richer ones.”

Citing research conducted by the charity Asthma UK, the Standard report said residents of Croydon were more likely than those anywhere else in the capital to require emergency admission to hospital during an attack.

According to the NHS statistics, in Croydon, “there were 720 A&E admissions due to asthma in 2016-2017, which equates to 188 for every 100,000 residents.”

The Standard’s report also said that Croydon “also had the third highest figure in London for the number of deaths with asthma as an underlying cause — 64 over the period 2007 to 2016”.

This statistic, based on evidence accumulated over a decade, rather than a one-year snapshot, helps to demonstrate that air quality in Croydon has been a long-term environmental disaster, and not just something that has happened recently.

Croydon’s poor air quality has long been attributed to the high volume of vehicle traffic on the major roads, such as the A23 which bisects the borough from north to south, and the area around the town centre, the A232, the Croydon Flyover and Fiveways, where the east-west route meets the Purley Way.

The Evening Standard’s map of asthma cases shows Croydon as the worst in the capital

The local authority’s response to the high traffic volumes and the borough’s poor air quality?

And from next month, an industrial-scale waste incinerator will fire up on the borough boundary on Beddington Lane, for which Croydon Council will be paying £10million per year to operate, while some residents will no doubt be paying with their health.

Croydon Council officials and elected representatives ought to be particularly worried by the borough’s poor air quality when next door, Bromley, had the lowest asthma hospital admission rates across London — 71 per 100,000 residents, and 35 deaths over the same decade.

Asthma UK is publishing a report today showing that where people live can have a direct bearing on their likelihood of being hospitalised or dying from asthma.

Dr Samantha Walker, director of research at Asthma UK, told the Standard: “It is truly shocking that people in deprived areas are not only struggling to make ends meet but if they have asthma, they are more likely to end up in hospital or die from an asthma attack.

“We should all have an equal right to breathe. Tackling health inequalities is meant to be a priority for NHS England and this report should be a wake-up call for policymakers.”

Peter Underwood, from Croydon Friends of the Earth, pictured right, said, “Croydon Council is going in the wrong direction. It is sending our waste to be burnt in the Beddington incinerator, which will spew fumes over Croydon for years to come. It is allowing the Westfield development to build a huge car park, encouraging even more traffic into central Croydon. And Tony Newman has recently said that he welcomes more flights at Gatwick airport, pouring out even more climate damaging pollution over our town.

“If we want to solve this problem then we need to take serious and drastic action, not just tinker around the edges.

“We need Croydon Council to stop dragging us in the wrong direction and set out real plans that will make a genuine difference to the quality of air we breathe. Our lives may depend on it.”

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About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London.
Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com

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News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London.
Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com